Easygoing Child? Empower Them With This Phrase

Remember the Staples Easy Button? That iconic red button that represented how easy Staples would make your life as a business owner? One push of that button, and you would hear a comforting, “That was easy.”

If you’ve given birth to an easygoing, flexible child you will gleefully slap that Easy Button more often than not.

Not that all parenting isn’t easy…

Here’s a snapshot into my Easygoing kid:

Sits through a 10 hour day in emerg, enduring 8 needles at the site of a bite mark to avoid rabies. End of day summary: “I had a lot of fun today, Mom. Just hanging out and getting to eat out for TWO meals.” Easy.

Stuck in an all-night traffic jam from a collision after a marathon day at an amusement park. Fusses for a few minutes about being tired and thirsty and restless. At around midnight, looks up at me and says: “But enough about me, Mom. How are you doing?” Easy.

Two snapshots into life with my boy. And if you are blessed to parent a child woven from similar fabric, you’ll understand.

In a slightly quieter stage of parenting, I now have the luxury of reflection time. But it wasn’t always so. Many days were octopus-crazy-arms waving wildly. Today I remember when I almost didn’t hear what my flexible boy was telling me. And how I learned to do better. Most days.

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After having three kids in four years God knew I needed a large dose of easygoing in my life. And being a thirdborn guarantees you enrollment in Easygoing Bootcamp. Because Mom has to go to All the Places and older brothers need to do All the Things and your role as a thirdborn is to Just. Be. Flexible.

When is your nap? When the van is in motion. Will it be a long nap? Depends how far we have to drive. Will you have a baby book? 100% not likely.

If you have three children super close in age, and your arms are filled with groceries and diaper bags, hands up if you know you need at LEAST one easygoing child.

So God gave me this one.

A curly-haired delectable thirdborn.

I recall the exact moment I realized what an easygoing child I had.

He was three years old and we were househunting. A lot. Which could have been a disaster with a strong-willed child or even a plain old regular kid. But nothing was hard with my little sidekick. I would ask him to put his buckle on and he would DO IT (I’m looking at you…firstborn). He would even put his buckle and shoes on 17 times without complaint as we went in and out of homes all day.

Each home tour was a new adventure. A chance to look at other children’s toys and admire them from a distance. A change of scenery on a cloudy afternoon. No questions. No objections.

A big part of this child being easygoing was his ability to entertain himself. He would tell himself amusing stories. Or look out the window and just see things. See All the Things and Think All the Thoughts like an easygoing superhero.

Super easy.

Before you think I’m overly optimistic, Rylan did occasionally protest. But since I was so used to his compliant nature, I would catch myself brushing aside his ask and focusing on a less-easygoing child whose protest rang louder.

Squeaky wheel and all that.

Moms of Easys (let’s make that a thing, shall we?) may not need as much caffeine, but we may need epiphanies.

On one particular day, Rylan wanted to bring a Thing in the van. And the Thing was in the basement and we already had our shoes on and were heading out the door in orchestrated chaos. I began launching into excuses that only an Easygoing Child might accept, when I caught sight of his little face.

I heard a sigh and saw a tear forming. My Easy kiddo was disappointed to his core.

And since guilt is a powerful motivator, I paused long enough to do what I should have done much sooner.

I crouched down and softly said, “Rylan. Is this really important to you?”

By speaking these seven words he knows he has my full attention: “Mom. This is really important to me.”

And trying to make This happen, is my way of honouring this easygoing child’s uniqueness.

possible side effects

This parenting tool works really well for children who don’t usually make demands. Is it possible for a sibling to take advantage of this phrase and look for loopholes and angles? Watch for these red flags.

Mom- it’s really important to me to dress up like a ninja for church this morning. Here’s how I handled that one.

Mom – it’s really important to me to eat 2 pounds of chocolate before school. Um. Just no.

What about a ridiculous amount of screen time? Or an insanely late bedtime? I don’t think so.

But chances are, if you hear too many of these wild requests, they won’t be coming from your easygoing child. So there’s that.

Go hug your Easy. And thank them for making you not-crazy on a regular basis.

Lightly Frayed Parents: Let’s get some data going. We’ll call it an unreliable sampling of facts. What place in the birth order is your most easygoing child?

I need hope & humour in my parenting – bring it on!

Comments

My easiest going is #3 of 4. #4 was most demanding child, and when doling out constant discipline to #4, he had to wait…and wait….and wait….
#2 child is also easy going, but at least she got heard for 4 years before #3 came along.
This article was really good. Thanks for a way to connect with the Easy Ones.

So glad this resonated with you, Elisabeth. This simple phrase offers such a simple but profound way to connect with the ones who tend to defer to siblings or don’t assert themselves in general. I really appreciate you taking the time to comment. Since you’ve met my ‘easygoing’ boy, you might enjoy seeing what the older version of him is like now in this story (he is 12 now) https://www.lightlyfrayed.com/moms-deserve-parenting-wins/

Karen Gauvreau would squeeze her four-baby-body into a cheerleader's uniform for you to know someone is rooting for you as a Mom - cartwheeling for your victories and offering a pep talk when you feel pummelled. If you laugh in the process, even better.